Sovereignty Over Certain Frontier Land: Belgium/ the Netherlands'

Sovereignty Over Certain Frontier Land: Belgium/ the Netherlands'

SOVEREIGNTY OVER CERTAIN FRONTIER LAND: BELGIUM/ THE NETHERLANDS' ALTHouGH both parties had accepted the jurisdiction of the World Court ipso facto and without special agreement under article 36(2) of the Statute,' this case was laid before the Court by special agreement 4 between them,8 article i of which is as follows: The Court is requested to determine whether sovereignty over the plots shown in the survey and known from 1836 to 1843 as Nos. 91 and 92, Section A, Zondereygen, belongs to the Kingdom of Belgium or the Kingdom of the Netherlands. As the Court remarked,5 The frontier between the two States in the area where the two plots in dispute are situated presents certain unusual features. Whilst the frontier in general is a linear one, in the area north of the Belgian town of Turnhout there are a number of enclaves formed by the Belgian commune of Baerle- Duc and the Netherlands commune of Baarle-Nassau. The territory of the Belgian commune of Baerle-Duc is not continuous. It is made up of a series of plots of land, many of which are enclosed in the Netherlands commune of Baarle-Nassau. Various pieces of the commune of Baerle-Duc are not only isolated from the main territory of Belgium but also one from another. Neither is the territory of the commune of Baarle- Nassau continuous: that commune has enclaves within Belgium. The Court is informed that the origin of this situation is very ancient. In 1836, before the separation of Belgium and The Netherlands was sanctioned by the Treaty of London, 1839,6 an attempt was made by the burgomasters of the two communes to establish the exact boundaries between the two communes in order to secure an equi- table allocation of land tax. In that year, the burgomasters, with their offi- cials, proceeded to establish as exactly as possible the division that had existed 'Case Concerning Sovereignty over Certain Frontier Land (Belgium/The Nether- lands), [959] I.C.J. Rep. 209. See also [1958-59] I.C.J. Y.B. zoo. [947] id. at 130; [1958-59] id. at 207, 27. n See STAT. INT'L CT. JusT. art. 36, para. x. [19s9] I.CJ. Rep. at z i. 'Id. at 212-13. , o [1959] I.C.J. Rep. at 213. 27 BRITISH AND FOREIGN STATE PAPERS 99o 1000 (1856). Vol. x96o: 252] BELGIUM/THE NETHERLANDS 253 from the earliest times between the plots of land enclosed within these com- munes. They established a Minute which is dated 29 November 1836, but which was not completed until about the middle of- 1839. It .was finally signed on 22 March x841. One copy of this "communal minute" recorded that plots 78-111, ob- viously inclusive of numbers 91 and 92, belonged to Baarle-Nassau-- that is, to what was to become Netherlands territory; the other copy apparently was lost. Under the Treaty of London, a boundary commission was set up and was signed, but did not complete its work until 1843. Meanwhile, the two governments signed a boundary treaty--after Belgium rejected a proposal for exchange of territory with a view to settlement and declared in favor of the status quo, which, accordingly, was provided for in the boundary treaty. That treaty also stipulated that the commission should draft a convention "in accordance with the foregoing provisions."" The resulting Boundary Convention of August 8, 1843,9 provided as follows:10 The frontier between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Kingdom of Belgium stretcbes from Prussia to the North Sea. The descriptive minute, the detailed survey maps and topographical maps, scale i/io,ooo, prepared and signed by the Commissioners, shall remain annexed to the present Convention and shall have the same force and effect as though they were inserted in their entirety. On reaching the said communes of Baerle-Duc and Baarle-Nassau, the boundary is interrupted in consequence of the impossibility of drawing a con- tinuous line between these two communes, in view of the provisions of Article 14 of the Treaty of 5 November 1842, which says: "The status quo shall be maintained both with regard to the villages of Baarle-Nassau (Netherlands) and Baerle-Duc (Belgium) and with regard to the ways crossing them." The "descriptive minute" referred to contained a provision quoting the preceding paragraph from the Treaty of 1842. It then purported to transcribe the old "communal minute" understood to have been agreed to in 1836 and signed in 1841. What actually appears is not simply that plots 78-111 belong to Baarle-Nassau, but that" 31 id. at 815. 'Id. at 837. Art. 7o. Translation from the French. ' Ratifications exchanged Oct. 3, 1843. '*Articles 1, 3, and 14(5), [959] I.C.J. Rep. 214, zx5. Translation from the French. "I Id. at 216. Translation from the French. DUKE LAW JOURNAL [Vol. x96o: z52 Plots numbers 78 to 90 inclusive belong to the commune of Baarle-Nassau. Plots numbers 91 and 92 belong to Baerle-Duc. Plots numbers 93 to i ii inclusive belong to Baarle-Nassau. An accompanying map, made a part of the Boundary Convention, shows plots 9I-92 as belonging to Belgium. The Court considered the question whether the Boundary Conven- tion of 1843 determined of itself the ownership of the plots by Belgium or confined its determination to a reference to the status quo. In accepting the former alternative and reaching the conclusion 12 that Belgian ownership established in 1843 had not been extinguished, the Court made use of the reasoning that follows. The Court regarded as beyond question the authority of the Bound- ary Commission, under the treaty of 1839, to demarcate, and hence to determine, the ownership of the two communes in dispute. This it deemed to be confirmed by the Boundary Convention of 1843. The express words of these two instruments were held to represent the 13 common intention of the two states. Accordingly: Any interpretation under which the Boundary Convention is regarded as leaving in suspense and abandoning for a subsequent appreciation of the status quo the determination of the right of one State or the other to the disputed plots would be incompatible with that common intention. The Court reaches the conclusion that the Boundary Convention was intended to determine, and did determine, as between the two States, to which State the various plots in each commune belonged. Under its terms, the disputed plots were determined to belong to Belgium. It will be remembered, however, that in the old "communal minute" of 1836-41 (which had been placed before the Court by The Nether- lands) plots 9 1-92, necessarily a part of plots 78-111, were by the local authorities of the Belgian and Netherlands communes, conceded to be a part of Baarle-Nassau-that is, of The Netherlands. The Netherlands Government had vigorously contended that, as the relevant treaties indicated that the status quo was to be maintained, plots 91-92 had been allotted to The Netherlands. It urged that the essential documents upon which the boundary commission based the decision written into the Boundary Convention of 1843 contained an error of transcription which "2The judges stood xo-4. The Court was composed of President Klaestad; Vice- President Zafrulla Khan; Judges Basdevant, Hackworth, Winiarski, Badawi, Armand- Ugon, Kojevnikov, Sir Hersch Lauterpacht, Moreno Quintana, C6rdova, Wellington Koo, Spiropoulos, and Sir Percy Spender. "8[1959] I.C.J. Rep. at 221-22. Vol. x96o: 25z] BELGIUM/THE NETHERL4NDS 255 vitiated that decision. The Court, however, after examination of all the evidence before it, felt that the explanation thus put forward failed "to have regard to the true function" of the boundary commission and to the facts as they appeared to it:14 The Commission was not a mere copyist. Its duty was to ascertain what the status quo was. It had authority to fix the limits between the two States, which duty it discharged. Apparently it was a copy of the communal minute then in the posses- sion of the Netherlands contingent of the Commission, which differed from the text presented by the Netherlands Government in the case at hand, that proved to be decisive. In final support of its finding that no case of mistake had been made out, the Court said: 5 The Boundary Convention of 1843 was the result of several years of labour, with members of the Mixed Boundary Commission not only in contact with the respective communal administrations but also with the Governments of the respective States. According to information furnished to the Court, copies of the text of the Communal Minute to be incorporated in the De- scriptive Minute, and which was in fact incorporated therein, were signed by the secretaries of each commune. The actual text transcribed was accordingly known to both communes and both States. The Convention was confirmed by the Parliament of each State and ratified in accordance with their consti- tutional processes. Its terms have been published in each State. For almost a century the Netherlands made no challenge to the attribution of the disputed plots to Belgium. The Netherlands, however, was able to show various acts and prac- tices which it claimed amounted to an effectual assumption of title by prescription or, in the words of the Court, "in derogation of title estab- lished by treaty." Until 1921-22, when considerably increased utiliza- tion and settlement of the areas began to occur, and when official correspondence between the two governments of a controversial charac- ter began to take place, the question of title was not a subject of any noteworthy interest to either of them.

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